Many people talk about bad writing versus good writing. Often the label of “good” or “bad” extends past the writing to the writer. There are many possible reasons as to why one writer may be considered “bad,” while another is thought of as “good.” But what is the main difference between good and bad writers?

Resilience.

Good writers are persistent. They refuse to give up. Bad writers stop when they hit a roadblock.

Most often a writer’s first novel isn’t all that great. Writing takes work, and the more you write, and the more you learn to write, the better you become at it. Writing a novel, short story, etc. is a big feat. However, writing a piece of work is only the first part. Revising and editing a piece comes after. Many times revision takes longer than writing the piece.

“All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.” (Edmund Burke)

Edmund Burke said this in the the 1700s, but the moral imperative for people to oppose evil is still applicable.

I was nominated for this challenge by Trish threehandsoneheart https://threehandsoneheart.wordpress.com . She is a wonderful blogger who always gives useful information and evocative and imaginative writings on her site. So, a deep thank you to Trish!

The Rules follow:

* Post one quotation a day for three days (they can be from other sources or one of your own).

* Nominate 3 other bloggers to participate per post.

* Thank the blogger who nominated you.

Here are my nominations : Please visit their sites and give them a click!

“There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.”

William Shakespeare Hamlet Act 1, Scene 5, Lines 166-167.

Life is always more complex and more wondrous than any of us can imagine. Shakespeare’s quotation reminds us not to be satisfied with easy explanations. The universe is very large and very mysterious.

Image credit: NASA/ESA

I was nominated for this challenge by Trish threehandsoneheart https://threehandsoneheart.wordpress.com . She is a wonderful blogger who always gives useful information and evocative and imaginative writings on her site. So, a deep thank you to Trish!

The Rules follow:

* Post one quotation a day for three days (they can be from other sources or one of your own).

* Nominate 3 other bloggers to participate per post.

* Thank the blogger who nominated you.

Here are my nominations : Please visit their sites and give them a click!

“You see things; and you say ‘Why?’ But I dream things that never were; and I say ‘Why not?’”
George Bernard Shaw

There is also a slightly different version of this quotation:

“Some people see things as they are and say why? I dream things that never were and say, why not?”
Robert Kennedy

Both quotations speak to the need to see the world differently than others, to maintain idealism, and to have hope for positive change.

I was nominated for this challenge by Trish threehandsoneheart https://threehandsoneheart.wordpress.com . She is a wonderful blogger who always gives useful information and evocative and imaginative writings on her site. So, a deep thank you to Trish!

The Rules follow:

* Post one quotation a day for three days (they can be from other sources or one of your own).

* Nominate 3 other bloggers to participate per post.

* Thank the blogger who nominated you.

Here are my nominations: Please visit their sites and give them a click!

I have shared some recipes from the three gentlemen who make up the ghost hunting group in my horror novel Maledicus: Investigative Paranormal Society Book I. These are the main characters in my novel, but there are other very important people also, and they will also share recipes with you. Today, I wanted to offer a baking recipe from Helen Murray.

Helen Murray, one of the main secondary characters, is a high school history teacher and the guardian of her niece Helena who was named for her. Helen became the child’s guardian when her sister and brother-in-law were killed by a drunk driver. The child was an infant when this tragedy occurred, so she has grown to the age of 5 thinking of Helen as her mother. One of the tasks involved with caring for the little girl that Helen embraced was baking. Previously, she had done very little of it, but after gaining the responsibility for taking care of this little girl, whom she loved, she found a passion for baking.

One of her simple recipes is also one of Helena’s favorite treats: Helen’s peanut butter cookies.

1/2 cup peanut butter (creamy)

1/2 cup butter–softened

1/2 cup granulated sugar

1/2 cup brown sugar

1 egg

1/2 teaspoon vanilla (or 1 vanilla bean if adventurous)

1/2 teaspoon baking soda

1/2 teaspoon salt

1&1/4 cups all-purpose flour

Put peanut butter and butter into mixing bowl. Use medium speed, and beat until the mixture is smooth (about 1-2 minutes). Add sugar, egg and vanilla. Use medium speed, and beat about another minute. Scrape bowl and combine together.

Add all the other ingredients for about 1 more minute of beating. Roll the dough into one inch balls. Press flat with a fork into a criss-cross pattern.

Bake at 375 degrees until golden brown. In Helen’s oven, that takes about 10 minutes. It could vary by a few minutes. Remove from baking sheets and let cool. This recipe will make about 33-37 cookies.

I want to thank Sarah Higbeehttps://sjhigbee.wordpress.com/ for nominating me to discuss my reading habits. I love reading, and I am always willing to discuss my habits and thoughts about it.

You have 20,000 books on your TBR. How in the world do you decide what to read next?

Well, this just about sounds like an accurate situation for me. I never have any loss of books to be read, whether for teaching, writing, or for pleasure. So, given that I usually am reading 5-6 books at one time, I would probably choose 1-2 to fit each category and attack them. And then, look at my piles of books on my bookshelves and wonder if I will ever get through them all. No matter, I won’t run out of reading material.

You’re halfway through a book and you’re just not loving it. Do you quit or commit?

This would depend on why I am reading the book. If I am reading a book for pleasure, and I simply do not love it or, at least, enjoy it, after halfway, then I would probably put it aside. But if there is anything good in it, I would finish it.

Now, if it were for teaching, then I would simply finish it. In that case, there is a duty to understanding the text fully and not being concerned primarily with my emotional reaction to the book. I hope, however, that most of the books I teach or read for teaching or writing I would enjoy.

The end of the year is coming and you’re so close yet so far away on your GoodReads challenge. Do you quit or commit?

This is an interesting question because I do not yet belong to GoodReads. It can, however, be applied to my reading goals in general. I do not set a specific number of books to be read in a given year, and since I love reading, I am never tempted to just go a week or two without reading. I can estimate that I do read somewhere between 150-200 books every year, so even if I were on the lower end of that scale or past it, I would simply keep going. There are always other books that are calling out to be read.

The covers of a series you love DO. NOT. MATCH. How do you cope?

Ok, I will be brutally honest here. I don’t care at all about the covers of the books.

Everyone and their mother loves a book you really don’t like. Who do you bond with over shared feelings?

I don’t worry about what other people feel about a book. I feel no need to please anyone by liking a book that I don’t because of the opinions of others. I think it is important for everyone have their own views and not be concerned if they fit in with any crowd.

You’re reading a book and you’re about to start crying in public. How do you deal?

Well, as a man of my age, I do not cry easily–yes, I am of that generation. I admit it. But if it were to happen while reading a book, I would just cry. I do not embarrass easily, and it just might provoke interesting conversation or responses. Hmmm….who is that man on the bus sobbing while he is reading? Maybe we should just move a few seats away from him.

A sequel of a book you loved just came out, but you’ve forgotten a lot from the prior novel. Will you re-read the book? Skip the sequel? Try to find a summary on GoodReads? Cry in frustration?

If this sequel is a book I really want to read, then I would probably reread the first book and then immediately read the sequel.

You don’t want ANYONE borrowing your books. How do you politely tell people “nope” when they ask?

This is not an issue for me, because I am a lover and owner of books, but I am not a collector. With the exceptions of books I need for teaching or work or a very few prized texts, I would allow most people to borrow from me.

You’ve picked up and put down five different books in the past month. How do you get over the reading slump?

I don’t have reading slumps. I may not like a book enough to finish it, but I am always reading several books at the same time.

There are so many new books coming out that you are dying to read! How many do you actually buy?

This depends on our financial situation. I never buy all of the books I want, because the rent and car payments need to be made. Food is good also! I wonder what would happen if I had an unlimited source of income–how many books would I buy?

Old Books on shelf

After you’ve bought a new book you want to get to, how long do they sit on your shelf until you actually read them?

Typically if I have just purchased a new book, then I will read it quickly. If, however, I am inundated with teaching and reading for work, then a new book might simply have to wait to be read. “Have patience,” I say to it. “I will get to you. I haven’t forgotten about you.”

Nomination time

I hope that you will enjoy answering these questions about your reading habits, if you have the time: